NACLA Update 3/11/10 New NACLA Report - Honduras: Whitewashing the Coup




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March/April 2010:
Honduras: Whitewashing the Coup

Since the June 28 military coup in Honduras, the country's de facto authorities have maintained a by now well-established track record of attempting to conceal their anti-democratic, violent disposition. This edition of the NACLA Report examines this process in both Tegucigalpa and in Washington-including the lengths to which Honduran coup authorities went both to undertake a show election in November, portraying it as legitimate (false claims of massive electoral participation, unaccredited electoral observers) while using coercive practices against dissidents in the run-up to the election (police attacks on protesters, blacklists of resistance members, shuttered anti-coup media). The result? No future Honduran president can count on fulfilling a term in office if the country's new oligarchs don't approve. Moreover, the election that brought Lobo to office has ensured the continuity of the golpista agenda in Tegucigalpa.

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New on nacla.org

A Crisis at the Central Bank Is a Crisis for Argentina's Democracyby Colin Miller
Since the year began, Argentina’'s president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner and the country's central bank have been in a serious row over the use of the bank's strategic reserves. The conflict began when Fernández asked the bank for more than $6 billion of reserves to create a Bicentennial Fund meant to pay down the national debt and restore Argentina's credibility in international financial markets. But political opponents of all ideologies have cried foul. Central bank reserves, they have argued, are not meant for paying down sovereign debt.

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U.S. to Haitians: Stay Home and Bear the Burden
by Todd Miller

After January's earthquake in Haiti, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security immediately implemented a mass migration plan to manage any influx of refugees coming from the country. Coast Guard spokesperson Lt. Chris O'Neil said that "The goal is to interdict them at sea and repatriate them." O'Neil's declaration reflects the same much-criticized immigration policy that the United States has implemented toward Haiti for dozens of years, a strategy that often corrals the blowback of a long history of U.S. meddling in Haitian internal affairs-both politically and economically. This blowback could be even more explosive now with 1.2 million homeless Haitians living in the squalor of tent cities.

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Events

Left Forum 2010
March 19-21, 2010
Pace University, One Pace Plaza New York, NY 10038

CLACS Research Colloquium
Desde dónde y hacia dónde "descolonizarse"
March 22, 2010 6 - 8 p.m.
King Juan Carlos Center 53 Washington Square South, Room 324

Peoples' World Conference on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth
April 19-22, 2010
Cochabamba, Bolivia

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